Spain's Prime Minister: Mariano Rajoy By: European People's Party - EPP |
On March
30th the Spanish government announced what was the most austere budget since Franco’s death in 1975. In an attempt to save €27bn this year,
public sector salaries will be frozen, ministries will face budget cuts of up
to 17%, income tax will rise by 1.9% and electricity and gas bills will rise by
7% and 5%, respectively. Unemployment benefit will be frozen and pensions will
be indexed to inflation. As a palliative for consumers, VAT will stay at its
current 18%. Following massive protests across Spain, which turned violent in
Barcelona, the budget minister Cristobal Montoro was careful to ensure that
most of the savings would come from higher corporate taxes, a fiscal amnesty in
return for a 10% fee and public sector cuts.
The
draconian budget follows negotiations with the European Union last month during
which Spain agreed to reduce its deficit from 8.5% to 5.3% of GDP in 2012. This
figure was a compromise on Spain’s earlier announcement in March that it would
reduce the deficit to 5.8%, a long way from the 4.4% previously agreed with the
EU. Blaming the previous Socialist government, the current administration
justified this unilateral announcement with its discovery that the country’s
finances were more rickety than it had expected.
A lot of
commentators have expressed doubts about the feasibility of the budget cuts.
One worry is that Spain might fall into a downward spiral of spending cuts,
recession, unemployment and falling tax revenues, given that the economy is
already in recession and predicted to shrink by 2% this year before any savings
are made. Moreover, unemployment already stands at 23%, rising to over 50% for
young people. Given that the troublesome regional governments were largely responsible
for Spain overshooting its deficit target of 6% last year by 2.5 percentage
points, the latest budget is at risk if they fail to cut down on their
spending.
On the
other hand Spain is anxious to step out of limelight and quash any concerns
about it needing a bailout, especially as bond yields rose almost a full
percentage point since the start of March. Should Spain prove incapable of
reining in its spending and raising revenue, interest rates could well rise to
unsustainable levels. Mr Rajoy has a brief window of opportunity to push
through his programme as exports in January were 3.9% higher than a year
earlier and a weaker recession in Europe ought to buoy the upward trend. Spain’s
public debt is also small by European standards, something that ought to give
it some respite.
Spain’s
budget is thus a gamble between self-perpetuating recession and slow growth.
One can only hope that it pays off.
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